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RIM's BlackBerry gets a grip on color
April 30, 2003 -
Danger shows off color-screen 'Hiptop'
March 18, 2003 -
Handheld demand not black and white
September 7, 2001
For months, Danger has been demonstrating a prototype of the color Hiptop handheld product. The upgrade adds a color screen and more memory to the soap bar-sized device, which allows users to make cell phone calls, to surf the Web and to send e-mail and instant messages. Like its grayscale predecessor, it will be marketed by T-Mobile under the "Sidekick" brand.
Nonwireless handhelds have been moving to color for some time, with black-and-white screens now found only in the least-expensive models from product makers such as Palm and Sony.
Brian Blair, an analyst at hedge fund Bluewater Capital, said the addition of color makes the Web surfing experience on the Hiptop "10 times better."
In addition to a color screen, the device will come with a faster 48MHz processor and 32MB of memory, double that of the original model. Palo Alto, Calif.-based
Existing T-Mobile plans for the Danger handheld run at $40 to $60 dollars a month for unlimited data transfer and with a set number of voice minutes. The German-owned carrier has not said whether there would be any changes to those plans.
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The announcement follows news that another formerly gray-only handheld is going color. Research In Motion said at a wireless conference last week that it will have a color version of the BlackBerry available this summer.
Blair said his understanding is that the new color BlackBerry will feature a much-improved interface. However, he said a question hangs over the software on the device.
"I think RIM historically has done one thing very well: corporate e-mail," Blair said. "For me, it's still a question of what other applications can they add to take advantage of color."




